Status
Released
original language
English
Budget
$ 0
Revenue
$ 0
PC George Dixon
PC Andy Mitchell
Tom Riley
Police Sgt. Roberts
Divisional Detective Inspector Cherry
Diana Lewis
Spud
PC 'Jock' Campbell
PC 'Taff' Hughes
Police Sgt. Brooks
Alf Lewis
Maisie
Mrs Em Dixon
Herself - Singer
PC at Darts Match (Uncredited)
Mrs Beryl Waterbourne (Uncredited)
Hospital Doctor (Uncredited)
Girl (Uncredited)
Detective (Uncredited)
Mary Bertha Lewis (Uncredited)
Cinema Doorman (Uncredited)
Woman Driver (Uncredited)
Mike Randall (Uncredited)
Drunk (Uncredited)
Blond Urchin (Uncredited)
Police Constable (Uncredited)
Man in ID Parade (Uncredited)
Barrow Boy (Uncredited)
June (Uncredited)
Driver in Crashed Car Sequence (Uncredited)
Bookmaker's Assistant at White City (Uncredited)
Mr Williams (Uncredited)
Man Being Fingerprinted (Uncredited)
Old Man in Crowd (Uncredited)
Chief Inspector Hammond (Uncredited)
Larry (Uncredited)
PC at Darts Game (Uncredited)
Man in Crowd (Uncredited)
Urchin (Uncredited)
Man in Crowd (Uncredited)
Man in Street (Uncredited)
Supt. Harwood (Uncredited)
Officious Man (Uncredited)
Man in Street (Uncredited)
White City Security Officer (Uncredited)
PC Wal Tovey (Uncredited)
Man in Crowd (Uncredited)
F.P. Jordan (Uncredited)
Station Sergeant (Uncredited)
Police Constable (Uncredited)
Police Sgt Grace Millard (Uncredited)
Man in Crowd (Uncredited)
Cinema Cashier (Uncredited)
Written by John Chard on 2014-02-08
Mustn't Grumble. The Blue Lamp is directed by Basil Dearden and written by T.E.B. Clarke. It stars Jack Warner, Jimmy Hanley, Dirk Bogarde, Robert Flemyng and Peggy Evans. Music is by Ernest Irving and cinematography by Gordon Dines. Andy Mitchell is a new recruit to the London police force, old hand George Dixon takes him under his wing and shows him the ropes. When Dixon is gunned down by a hot headed crook, Mitchell, the force, and the close knit community, all rally round to catch the villain. What chiefly makes The Blue Lamp a fine watch is being able to witness the good old days of the British Bobby. It was a time when the copper was a feared and reassuring presence on the British streets, they walked the beat so everyone could sleep easy in their beds, help was but merely a whistle away. In that, this Ealing Studios production does a wonderful job, the essence is perfect, the locale and the dialect used is absolutely spot on, whilst the story is an accomplished piece that brings to notice the sad emergence of trigger happy crooks, a new breed of thug who's discipline quota was zero. It also looks nice, with a film noir sheen presented for the night-time sequences, while Dearden offers up a great action scene and closes the picture down with a tense chase finale at White City Greyhound Stadium. There’s inevitably some staid performances indicative of the time, and it definitely paints the police and surrounding community through rose tinted spectacles, but they are small complaints that ultimately can’t stop The Blue Lamp from being a most engaging viewing experience. 7.5/10
Written by Geronimo1967 on 2022-12-27
I think a lot of what makes this film resonate, even now 50-odd years later - is the stark fact that back then, the murder of a police officer was still pretty rare and was a crime guaranteed to galvanise both the police and the criminal fraternities alike against the culprit. That all helps to create an authentic scenario in which Dirk Bogarde is super as a petty thief who gets caught up in events that quickly run out of control. Peggy Evans is great, too, as the hysterical girlfriend. Basil Dearden keeps the whole thing tense and engrossing as the net begins to close and we get a gripping finale to this fairly simple film.